Out of the Dust

Did the "Last Jaredite," Coriantumr, Leave Descendants?

Those who have not carefully read the writings by Latter-day Saints of generations past who meticulously examined the Book
of Mormon to extract new knowledge from it will have missed some interesting ideas. Some may imagine that thinking about
the Book of Mormon in the days of our grandfathers or farther back was characterized by drab uniformity. But some surprisingly
innovative notions can be seen at times.

Anthony W. Ivins, who would later become an apostle and counselor to President Heber J. Grant, in 1902 came up with an idea
that may have been unique.1

He asked the question, "Are the Jaredites an extinct people?" to which most
readers of the Book of Mormon would quickly respond, of course, long since extinct.
But on the basis of his research, Ivins, who was a native of the Mexican LDS colonies, felt that the answer might not be so definite. He reported that in
the national archives in Mexico City he had recently found an account by Francisco
Muñoz de la Vega, a former Catholic bishop in the state of Chiapas in southern
Mexico, in which the cleric reported on an ancient manuscript that was in his
possession. It stated that "the father and founder of their nation was named
Te-po-na-hu-ale, which signified, 'Lord of the Hollow Piece of Wood.'" The document
further reported that this ancestor was "present at the building of the great
tower, and beheld with his own eyes the confusion of languages." After that
event, God commanded him to come "to these extensive regions [of Mesoamerica]
and divide them among mankind."

Ivins posed the question, "Was the writer of this manuscript a Jaredite?" Jared was present at the building of the Tower of Babel
and witnessed the confusion of languages. Then the Lord had him build barges ("hollow pieces of wood"?) to cross the ocean to the
New World. But how might a record of these matters have been preserved, since the book of Ether seems to say that all Jaredites
were destroyed? Ivins's suggested solution to the puzzle was that Coriantumr could have had descendants. Before his death, that
final Jaredite king lived for the space of nine moons among the people of Zarahemla before the latter people came to a knowledge
of the Nephites (see Omni 1:21–22). "During this period he may have begotten children." This seems even more likely, Ivins
thought, given "the high estimate placed upon posterity by the ancients." It is logical that he would desire that his name
be preserved, so he "would take [Mulekite] wives and beget children." Those descendants "would undoubtedly teach their
children the story of the origin of their fathers" and of the great tower, hence the tradition recorded in the document
held by de la Vega.

Obviously Anthony W. Ivins was not a conventional thinker when it came to the Book of Mormon. A more detailed examination of the
writings of this student of the Book of Mormon might be rewarding to those who suppose that 80 years ago an independent-thinking
Mormon was a contradiction in terms.

Lake Michigan Barge

The mysterious wooden vessel reported earlier2 in this department has since been
identified as a demonstration model of a proposed "sea-going tow barge" developed during World War II for the U. S. Navy.
Mike Tym, a Ukrainian immigrant and inveterate inventor, built the 34-foot long prototype "floating fuel tank" in his shop.
It was made semi-submersible so as to be difficult to detect, and it proved effective in tests. But the Navy decided against
building more, and the test version was abandoned and sank near the Chicago River locks. Mr. Tym died in 1981.
3

Bronze Arrowheads and the Name Aha

In the May/June 1999 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review, P. Kyle McCarter Jr. of Johns Hopkins University reports
significant new analyses of three artifacts from ancient Israel. On two points the findings intersect with the Book of Mormon.

The objects are bronze arrowheads on which Hebrew inscriptions have been engraved. They come from the eleventh century B.C., a
time for which hardly any other instances of Hebrew writing are known. The total number of such arrow points is now near 50, so
considerable new light on the history of the Hebrew script is being revealed by examining them.

The information of special interest to students of the Book of Mormon concerns metallurgy and a name inscribed on one of the
points. Using a high-magnification microscope, Dr. R. Thomas Chase of the Freer Gallery of Art, a division of the Smithsonian
Institution in Washington and an authority on ancient bronzes, examined the newest set of points to be located and discovered
that on one "the inscription had been incised with a steel [emphasized in the original] engraving tool."
4 This demonstrates that steel was in use by about 1000 BC.
The Book of Mormon of course refers to the sword of Laban, who lived four centuries later; that sword was of "the most
precious steel" (1 Nephi 4:9). Some have questioned whether steel was known as early as 600 BC. but clearly
the new data show that that metal was in use centuries earlier.

One of the points examined by Thomas and McCarter
bears an inscription that translates as "The arrowhead of 'Aha' son of 'Ashtart.'" The name Aha is apparently the same as
that borne by a man mentioned in the Book of Mormon. Alma 16:5 says that Zoram, the chief captain over the armies of the
Nephites at that time, "had two sons, Lehi and Aha." Formerly the personal name Aha had not been known from the Bible
or other Hebrew-language sources, but this new information documents that the name was in use long before Lehi's day.
5

Similarities between the Anthon Transcript and Old South Arabian (Arabic)

The "Anthon Transcript" consists of characters copied from the gold plates in Joseph Smith's possession. According to David
Whitmer, Joseph personally spent "a whole week" to make a copy of the hieroglyphics made from the first of the gold plates.
He was especially "particular" so "that the characters should be perfectly reproduced and that the 'reformed Egyptian'
language should be shown up in all its native simplicity."6 Martin Harris presented
Joseph Smith's handwritten copies to Pro fessor Charles Anthon of Columbia University with the request that he translate them.

Researchers have presumed that a fragment of paper in the possession of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints, on which seven lines of characters appear, was the piece shown to Anthon. Consequently it is commonly called the
"Anthon Transcript" in discussions of the subject by LDS scholars. However, there appears to have been more than one sheet on
which characters were copied. Hence, we cannot be absolutely certain that the commonly reproduced one is the original, but
it is the best version available for study.7

Various attempts have been made
to connect these characters with historically known writing systems. Edward Ashment suggested Micmac Indian script, Ariel
Crowley sought to show connections to Demotic Egyptian and to Mayan, and Carl Hugh Jones drew attention to a unique script
found on a Mexican artifact.8 However, none of the proposals has settled all
questions about the Anthon Transcript.

Taylor Mammen, a BYU student working under the direction of Professor S. Kent
Brown, recently compared the Anthon Transcript characters to those used to write
Old South Arabian and Old North Arabian. Those scripts, preserved first in personal
names and spells, date from the seventh century BC. 9
Old South Arabian is particularly interesting because it was spoken and written
not many hundred miles from the area where Lehi and his party reached the Indian
Ocean and built their vessel to sail off to America. Moreover, there is good
reason to believe that "the place which was called Nahom" (1 Nephi 16:34) lay
within the population which wrote and spoke a dialect of Old South Arabian.
Mammen's unpublished manuscript demonstrates plausible relationships between
Old South Arabian and 12 characters found on the piece of paper shown to Anthon
as well as between Old North Arabian and 25 Anthon Transcript characters. Naturally,
we do not know whether the sounds represented by the Old South Arabian letters
are similar in any way to the sounds that the characters on the Anthon Transcript
may have represented.

7. See John L. Sorenson, "The Book of Mormon as a Mesoamerican Record," in Book of Mormon Authorship Revisited: The Evidence for Ancient Origins, ed. Noel B. Reynolds (Provo, Utah: FARMS, 1997), 414–17.

9. For the alphabetic signs, see G. Lankester Harding, An Index and Concordance
of Pre-Islamic Arabian Names and Inscriptions (Toronto: University of Toronto
Press, 1971), 6. On the history of the language, see John L. Hayes, "Arabic,"
in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East, ed. Eric
M. Meyers et al. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1997), 1:166–69.

The views expressed in Maxwell Institute publications are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the position of the Maxwell Institute, Brigham Young University, or The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.